Thursday, August 13, 2020

Groundhog Day

A little before lunch we were toned out for an unconscious male. 


We arrived on scene to find the patient laying on his stomach in his bedroom. He was completely unresponsive and had vomited. Fortunately for him he was on his stomach so he didn't aspirate.

The family, not wanting to see their father in his condition, went outside as soon as we arrived. Our repeated attempts to get information from them failed. We were totally in the blind. 

Eventually we found a bottle of Carisoprodol (Soma) that was empty and shouldn't have been. 

After controlling the airway with an NPA an IV was started and Narcan was administered. This brought the patient around a little to the point where he could kinda protect his own airway. AMR then transported him to the hospital.

7 hours later we returned to the same address for an unconscious male. 

Same story as before. He had been discharged from the hospital and on returning home, decided to take more pills. This time, when we arrived, the patient was still alert enough to be able refuse treatment and transport to the hospital. We even had PD there but they said there wasn't enough to put him on a 5150 hold. So we had to sign him out against medical advice and leave knowing we'd be back.

3 hours later we returned to the same address for an unconscious male. 

This time when we arrived the male patient had taken yet more pills. He was now on the floor of his room, face up, and had hurled again. This time he aspirated the vomit. On scene and en route to the hospital we were supporting his breathing with a BVM and an OPA. We were unable to get him stable.

I have no idea what the outcome was for this patient but I do know that I haven't been back to that address in years. I still think of the patient every time we have a call on that street.

Wednesday, July 29, 2020

Attach Truck 51 To The Call

While on a medical call for a man with runny nose we heard Engine 52 get dispatched to a smoke investigation. Almost always a BS call....almost. No specific address but there was an address for the RP (reporting party). We listened in as Engine 52 arrived on scene and reported the smell of smoke in the area. Now our ears perked up both for the next radio report from the Engine and for the sound of our ambulance.


Both showed up at once.

Engine 52 announced that they had smoke coming from the eves of a house mid block and asked dispatch for a first alarm assignment and a tactical channel. They had a working structure fire.

As our ambulance crew exited their vehicle I gave a short but sweet pass along (thankfully my patient wasn't critical). 62 year old male, runny nose times 12 hours. The crew, having also been listening to Engine 52 said, "We got it, GO!"

"Dispatch, Truck 51, attach Truck 51 to the call with Engine 52."

Now 1 minute out we let Engine 52 know that we are approaching the scene with Engine 53 right behind us. We get assigned to vertically ventilate the house while Engine 53 is assigned to tag a hydrant.

As we were throwing a ladder to the roof we received word from Engine 53 stating that a neighbor reported that the homeowner was still inside the burning house. We immediately switched from vent group to search group.

My crew and I entered the house and I made contact with the Captain from Engine 52. He said that they had found several different fires inside the residence. He said that he would search the left side of the house if we searched the right. 

Inside the first bedroom I looked through the thermal imager and saw a man laying on the the bed. I stepped back out of the way next to the door and directed my firefighter and engineer to the victim. They grabbed him by the arms and legs and carried him outside.

Outside in the grass, we started a quick assessment of the patient. He was not breathing and he had no pulse. I directed my crew to grab the EMS gear while I started CPR, still masked up and breathing through my SCBA.

After 3 minutes of excellent EMS care the patient's heart started beating again. Fortunately the ambulance was just arriving on scene. It seems just as soon as we arrived on scene we were leaving again, this time in the back of the ambulance taking out patient to the ER.

After the call we found out the the victim had intended suicide. He had also set some booby traps for us. Behind each bedroom door, he had set a 5 gallon bucket full of gasoline with sheets tacked to the ceiling leading to the bucket. He had also poured gasoline all over the house and started several fires. Fortunately for us, the house was well insulated. There was so much smoke in the house that it smothered the fire. If we had been able to ventilate the house the outcome may have been totally different.